首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) is the entry enzyme of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. To obtain the structural information on inhibitor/quinone binding sites, we synthesized [3H]benzophenone-asimicin ([3H]BPA), a photoaffinity analogue of asimicin, which belongs to the acetogenin family known as the most potent complex I inhibitor. We found that [3H]BPA was photo-crosslinked to ND2, ND1 and ND5 subunits, by the three dimensional separation (blue-native/doubled SDS-PAGE) of [3H]BPA-treated bovine heart submitochondrial particles. The cross-linking was blocked by rotenone. This is the first finding that ND2 was photo-crosslinked with a potent complex I inhibitor, suggesting its involvement in the inhibitor/quinone-binding.  相似文献   

2.
《BBA》2020,1861(12):148287
Respiratory complex I (NADH:quinone oxidoreductase) plays a central role in generating the proton electrochemical gradient in mitochondrial and bacterial membranes, which is needed to generate ATP. Several high-resolution structures of complex I have been determined, revealing its intricate architecture and complementing the biochemical and biophysical studies. However, the molecular mechanism of long-range coupling between ubiquinone (Q) reduction and proton pumping is not known. Computer simulations have been applied to decipher the dynamics of Q molecule in the ~30 Å long Q tunnel. In this short report, we discuss the binding and dynamics of Q at computationally predicted Q binding sites, many of which are supported by structural data on complex I. We suggest that the binding of Q at these sites is coupled to proton pumping by means of conformational rearrangements in the conserved loops of core subunits.  相似文献   

3.
An intriguing feature of mitochondrial complex I from several species is the so-called A/D transition, whereby the idle enzyme spontaneously converts from the active (A) form to the de-active (D) form. The A/D transition plays an important role in tissue response to the lack of oxygen and hypoxic deactivation of the enzyme is one of the key regulatory events that occur in mitochondria during ischaemia. We demonstrate for the first time that the A/D conformational change of complex I does not affect the macromolecular organisation of supercomplexes in vitro as revealed by two types of native electrophoresis. Cysteine 39 of the mitochondrially-encoded ND3 subunit is known to become exposed upon de-activation. Here we show that even if complex I is a constituent of the I + III2 + IV (S1) supercomplex, cysteine 39 is accessible for chemical modification in only the D-form. Using lysine-specific fluorescent labelling and a DIGE-like approach we further identified two new subunits involved in structural rearrangements during the A/D transition: ND1 (MT-ND1) and 39 kDa (NDUFA9). These results clearly show that structural rearrangements during de-activation of complex I include several subunits located at the junction between hydrophilic and hydrophobic domains, in the region of the quinone binding site. De-activation of mitochondrial complex I results in concerted structural rearrangement of membrane subunits which leads to the disruption of the sealed quinone chamber required for catalytic turnover.  相似文献   

4.
The mitochondrial rotenone-sensitive NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) comprises more than 35 subunits, the majority of which are encoded by the nucleus. In Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, only five components (ND1, ND2, ND4, ND5 and ND6) are coded for by the mitochondrial genome. Here, we characterize two mitochondrial mutants (dum5 and dum17) showing strong reduction or inactivation of complex I activity: dum5 is a 1T deletion in the 3' UTR of nd5 whereas dum17 is a 1T deletion in the coding sequence of nd6. The impact of these mutations and of mutations affecting nd1, nd4 and nd4/nd5 genes on the assembly of complex I is investigated. After separation of the respiratory complexes by blue native (BN)-PAGE or sucrose gradient centrifugation, we demonstrate that the absence of intact ND1 or ND6 subunit prevents the assembly of the 850 kDa whole complex, whereas the loss of ND4 or ND4/ND5 leads to the formation of a subcomplex of 650 kDa present in reduced amount. The implications of our findings for the possible role of these ND subunits on the activity of complex I and for the structural organization of the membrane arm of the enzyme are discussed. In mitochondria from all the strains analyzed, we moreover detected a 160-210 kDa fragment comprising the hydrophilic 49 kDa and 76 kDa subunits of the complex I peripheral arm and showing NADH dehydrogenase activity.  相似文献   

5.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) was purified from bovine heart mitochondria by solubilization with n-dodecyl beta-D-maltoside (lauryl maltoside), ammonium sulfate fractionation, and chromatography on Mono Q in the presence of the detergent. Its subunit composition was very similar to complex I purified by conventional means. Complex I was dissociated in the presence of N,N-dimethyldodecylamine N-oxide and beta-mercaptoethanol, and two subcomplexes, I alpha and I beta, were isolated by chromatography. Subcomplex I alpha catalyzes electron transfer from NADH to ubiquinone-1. It is composed of about 22 different and mostly hydrophilic subunits and contains 2.0 nmol of FMN/mg of protein. Among its subunits is the 51-kDa subunit, which binds FMN and NADH and probably contains a [4Fe-4S] cluster also. Three other potential Fe-S proteins, the 75- and 24-kDa subunits and a 23-kDa subunit (N-terminal sequence TYKY), are also present. All of the Fe-S clusters detectable by EPR in complex I, including cluster 2, are found in subcomplex I alpha. The line shapes of the EPR spectra of the Fe-S clusters are slightly broadened relative to spectra measured on complex I purified by conventional means, and the quinone reductase activity is insensitive to rotenone. Similar changes were found in samples of the intact chromatographically purified complex I, or in complex I prepared by the conventional method and then subjected to chromatography in the presence of lauryl maltoside. Subcomplex I beta contains about 15 different subunits. The sequences of many of them contain hydrophobic segments that could be membrane spanning, including at least two mitochondrial gene products, ND4 and ND5. The role of subcomplex I beta in the intact complex remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

6.
Mitochondrial NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) is a very large membrane protein complex with a central function in energy metabolism. Complex I from the aerobic yeast Yarrowia lipolytica comprises 14 central subunits that harbour the bioenergetic core functions and at least 28 accessory subunits. Despite progress in structure determination, the position of individual accessory subunits in the enzyme complex remains largely unknown. Proteomic analysis of subcomplex Iδ revealed that it lacked eleven subunits, including the central subunits ND1 and ND3 forming the interface between the peripheral and the membrane arm in bacterial complex I. This unexpected observation provided insight into the structural organization of the connection between the two major parts of mitochondrial complex I. Combining recent structural information, biochemical evidence on the assignment of individual subunits to the subdomains of complex I and sequence-based predictions for the targeting of subunits to different mitochondrial compartments, we derived a model for the arrangement of the subunits in the membrane arm of mitochondrial complex I.  相似文献   

7.
Quinones are naturally occurring isoprenoids that are widely exploited by photosynthetic reaction centers. Protein interactions modify the properties of quinones such that similar quinone species can perform diverse functions in reaction centers. Both type I and type II (oxygenic and nonoxygenic, respectively) reaction centers contain quinone cofactors that serve very different functions as the redox potential of similar quinones can operate at up to 800 mV lower reduction potential when present in type I reaction centers. However, the factors that determine quinone function in energy transduction remain unclear. It is thought that the location of the quinone cofactor, the geometry of its binding site, and the "smart" matrix effects from the surrounding protein environment greatly influence the functional properties of quinones. Photosystem II offers a unique system for the investigation of the factors that influence quinone function in energy transduction. It contains identical plastoquinones in the primary and secondary quinone acceptor sites, Q(A) and Q(B), which exhibit very different functional properties. This study is focused on elucidating the tuning and control of the primary semiquinone state, Q(A)(-), of photosystem II. We utilize high-resolution two-dimensional hyperfine sublevel correlation spectroscopy to directly probe the strength and orientation of the hydrogen bonds of the Q(A)(-) state with the surrounding protein environment of photosystem II. We observe two asymmetric hydrogen bonding interactions of reduced Q(A)(-) in which the strength of each hydrogen bond is affected by the relative nonplanarity of the bond. This study confirms the importance of hydrogen bonds in the redox tuning of the primary semiquinone state of photosystem II.  相似文献   

8.
The evolutionary origin of photosynthetic reaction centers has long remained elusive. Here, we use sequence and structural analysis to demonstrate an evolutionary link between the cytochrome b subunit of the cytochrome bc(1) complex and the core polypeptides of the photosynthetic bacterial reaction center. In particular, we have identified an area of significant sequence similarity between a three contiguous membrane-spanning domain of cytochrome b, which contains binding sites for two hemes, and a three contiguous membrane-spanning domain in the photosynthetic reaction center core subunits, which contains binding sites for cofactors such as (bacterio)chlorophylls, (bacterio)pheophytin and a non-heme iron. Three of the four heme ligands in cytochrome b are found to be conserved with the cofactor ligands in the reaction center polypeptides. Since cytochrome b and reaction center polypeptides both bind tetrapyrroles and quinones for electron transfer, the observed sequence, functional and structural similarities can best be explained with the assumption of a common evolutionary origin. Statistical analysis further supports a distant but significant homologous relationship. On the basis of previous evolutionary analyses that established a scenario that respiration evolved prior to photosynthesis, we consider it likely that cytochrome b is the evolutionary precursor for type II reaction center apoproteins. With a structural analysis confirming a common evolutionary origin of both type I and type II reaction centers, we further propose a novel "reaction center apoprotein early" hypothesis to account for the development of photosynthetic reaction center holoproteins.  相似文献   

9.
NADH–quinone (Q) oxidoreductase is a large and complex redox proton pump, which utilizes the free energy derived from oxidation of NADH with lipophilic electron/proton carrier Q to translocate protons across the membrane to generate an electrochemical proton gradient ( ). Although its molecular mechanism is largely unknown, recent biochemical, biophysical, and molecular biological studies have revealed that particular subunits and cofactors play an essential role in the energy-coupling reaction. Based on these latest experimental data, we exhaustively analyzed the sequence information available from evolutionarily related enzymes such as [NiFe] hydrogenases. We found significant and conserved sequence differences in the PSST/Nqo6/NuoB, 49kDa/Nqo4/NuoD, and ND1/Nqo8/NuoH subunit homologs between complex I/NDH-1 and [NiFe] hydrogenases. The alterations, especially in the postulated ligand motif for cluster N2 in the PSST/Nqo6/NuoB subunits, appear to be evolutionarily important in determining the physiological function of complex I/NDH-1. These observations led us to propose a hypothetical evolutionary scheme: during the course of evolution, drastic changes have occurred in the putative cluster N2 binding site in the PSST/Nqo6/NuoB subunit and the progenitors of complex I/NDH-1 have concurrently become to utilize a lipophilic electron/proton carrier such as Q as its physiological substrate. This scheme provides new insights into the structure and function relationship of complex I/NDH-1 and may help us understand its energy-coupling mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
Complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) is crucial to respiration in many aerobic organisms. The hydrophilic domain of complex I, containing nine or more redox cofactors, and comprising seven conserved core subunits, protrudes into the mitochondrial matrix or bacterial cytoplasm. The α-helical membrane-bound hydrophobic domain contains a further seven core subunits that are mitochondrial-encoded in eukaryotes and named the ND subunits (ND1-ND6 and ND4L). Complex I couples the oxidation of NADH in the hydrophilic domain to ubiquinone reduction and proton translocation in the hydrophobic domain. Although the mechanisms of NADH oxidation and intramolecular electron transfer are increasingly well understood, the mechanisms of ubiquinone reduction and proton translocation remain only poorly defined. Recently, an α-helical model of the hydrophobic domain of bacterial complex I [Efremov, Baradaran and Sazanov (2010) Nature 465, 441-447] revealed how the 63 transmembrane helices of the seven core subunits are arranged, and thus laid a foundation for the interpretation of functional data and the formulation of mechanistic proposals. In the present paper, we aim to correlate information from sequence analyses, site-directed mutagenesis studies and mutations that have been linked to human diseases, with information from the recent structural model. Thus we aim to identify and discuss residues in the ND subunits of mammalian complex I which are important in catalysis and for maintaining the enzyme's structural and functional integrity.  相似文献   

11.
In reaction center proteins of photosynthetic bacteria, the amplitude of proton uptake induced by the one-electron reduction of either of the two quinone electron acceptors (Q(A) and Q(B)) is an intrinsic observable of the electrostatic interactions associated with the redox function of the complex. We report here that, in Rhodobacter capsulatus, complete restoration of proton uptake (upon formation of Q(A)(-) and Q(B)(-)) to the level found in the wild type is observed in a mutant reaction center in which a tyrosine substitution in the Q(A) environment (Ala(M274) --> Tyr) is coupled with mutations of acidic residues near Q(B) (Glu(L212) --> Ala/Asp(L213) --> Ala) that initially cancel the proton uptake above pH 8. This result demonstrates that proton uptake occurs by strong cooperation between structural motifs, such as hydrogen-bonded networks, that span the 18 A distance between the two quinone acceptors.  相似文献   

12.
The mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase (complex I) in mammalian cells is a multimeric enzyme consisting of approximately 40 subunits, 7 of which are encoded in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). Very little is known about the function of these mtDNA-encoded subunits. In this paper, we describe the efficient isolation from a human cell line of mutants affected in any of these subunits. In the course of analysis of eight mutants of the human cell line VA2B selected for their resistance to high concentrations of the complex I inhibitor rotenone, seven were found to be respiration deficient, and among these, six exhibited a specific defect of complex I. Transfer of mitochondria from these six mutants into human mtDNA-less cells revealed, surprisingly, in all cases a cotransfer of the complex I defect but not of the rotenone resistance. This result indicated that the rotenone resistance resulted from a nuclear mutation, while the respiration defect was produced by an mtDNA mutation. A detailed molecular analysis of the six complex I-deficient mutants revealed that two of them exhibited a frameshift mutation in the ND4 gene, in homoplasmic or in heteroplasmic form, resulting in the complete or partial loss, respectively, of the ND4 subunit; two other mutants exhibited a frameshift mutation in the ND5 gene, in near-homoplasmic or heteroplasmic form, resulting in the ND5 subunit being undetectable or strongly decreased, respectively. It was previously reported (G. Hofhaus and G. Attardi, EMBO J. 12:3043-3048, 1993) that the mutant completely lacking the ND4 subunit exhibited a total loss of NADH:Q1 oxidoreductase activity and a lack of assembly of the mtDNA-encoded subunits of complex I. By contrast, in the mutant characterized in this study in which the ND5 subunit was not detectable and which was nearly totally deficient in complex I activity, the capacity to assemble the mtDNA-encoded subunits of the enzyme was preserved, although with a decreased efficiency or a reduced stability of the assembled complex. The two remaining complex I-deficient mutants exhibited a normal rate of synthesis and assembly of the mtDNA-encoded subunits of the enzyme, and the mtDNA mutation(s) responsible for their NADH dehydrogenase defect remains to be identified. The selection scheme used in this work has proven to be very valuable for the isolation of mutants from the VA2B cell line which are affected in different mtDNA-encoded subunits of complex I and may be applicable to other cell lines.  相似文献   

13.
Here we propose shotgun proteomics as an alternative method to gel-based bottom-up proteomic platform for the structural characterization of mitochondrial NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I). The approach is based on simultaneous identification of subunits after global digestion of the intact complex. Resulting mixture of tryptic peptides is purified, concentrated, separated and online analyzed using nano-scale reverse-phase nano-ESI-MS/MS in a single information dependent acquisition mode. The usefulness of the method is demonstrated in our work on the well described model system of complex I from bovine heart mitochondria. The shotgun method led to the identification and partial sequence characterization of 42 subunits representing more than 95% coverage of the complex. In particular, almost all nuclear (except MLRQ) and 5 mitochondria DNA encoded subunits (except ND4L and ND6) were identified. Furthermore, it was possible to identify 30 co-purified proteins of the inner mitochondrial membrane structurally not belonging to complex I. The method's efficiency is shown by comparing it to two classical 1 D gel-based strategies. Shotgun proteomics is less laborious, significantly faster and requires less sample material with minimal treatment, facilitating the screening for post-translational modifications and quantitative and qualitative differences of complex I subunits in genetic disorders.  相似文献   

14.
Kinetic analysis using pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) of photosynthetic electron transfer in the photosystem I reaction centres of Synechocystis 6803, in wild-type Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and in site directed mutants of the phylloquinone binding sites in C. reinhardtii, indicates that electron transfer from the reaction centre primary electron donor, P700, to the iron-sulphur centres, Fe-S(X/A/B), can occur through either the PsaA or PsaB side phylloquinone. At low temperature reaction centres are frozen in states which allow electron transfer on one side of the reaction centre only. A fraction always donates electrons to the PsaA side quinone, the remainder to the PsaB side.  相似文献   

15.
Using a photoaffinity labeling technique, Nakamaru-Ogiso et al. demonstrated that fenpyroximate, a strong inhibitor of bovine heart mitochondrial NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I), binds to the ND5 subunit [Nakamaru-Ogiso, E., et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 746-754]. Considering that the main body of the ND5 subunit composed of transmembrane helixes 1-15 is located at the distal end of the membrane domain [Efremov, R. G., et al. (2010) Nature 465, 441-445], however, their result may be questionable. Because establishing the number and location of inhibitors and/or quinone binding sites in the membrane domain is necessary to elucidate the function of the enzyme, it is critical to clarify whether there is an additional inhibitor and/or quinone binding site besides the interface between the hydrophilic and membrane domains. We therefore performed photoaffinity labeling experiments using two newly synthesized fenpyroximate derivatives [[(125)I]-4-azidophenyl fenpyroximate ([(125)I]APF) and [(125)I]-3-azido-5-iodobenzyl fenpyroximate ([(125)I]AIF)] possessing a photoreactive azido group at and far from the pharmacophoric core moiety, respectively. Doubled sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that [(125)I]APF and [(125)I]AIF bind to the PSST and 49 kDa subunits, respectively. Careful examination of the fragmentation patterns of the labeled PSST and 49 kDa subunits generated by limited proteolysis indicated that the residues labeled by [(125)I]APF and [(125)I]AIF are located in the Ser43-Arg66 (PSST) and Asp160-Arg174 (49 kDa) regions, respectively, which face the supposed quinone-binding pocket formed at the interface of the PSST, 49 kDa, and ND1 subunits. We conclude that fenpyroximate does not bind to the distal end of the membrane domain but rather resides at the interface between the two domains in a manner such that the pharmacophoric pyrazole ring and side chain of the inhibitor orient toward the PSST and 49 kDa subunits, respectively. This study answers a critical question relating to complex I.  相似文献   

16.
Two-dimensional crystals of dimeric photosynthetic reaction centre-LH1-PufX complexes have been analysed by cryoelectron microscopy. The 8.5A resolution projection map extends previous analyses of complexes within native membranes to reveal the alpha-helical structure of two reaction centres and 28 LH1 alphabeta subunits within the dimer. For the first time, we have achieved sufficient resolution to suggest a possible location for the PufX transmembrane helix, the orientation of the RC and the arrangement of helices within the surrounding LH1 complex. Whereas low-resolution projections have shown an apparent break in the LH1, our current map reveals a diffuse density within this region, possibly reflecting high mobility. Within this region the separation between beta14 of one monomer and beta2 of the other monomer is approximately 6A larger than the average beta-beta spacing within LH1; we propose that this is sufficient for exchange of quinol at the RC Q(B) site. We have determined the position and orientation of the RC within the dimer, which places its Q(B) site adjacent to the putative PufX, with access to the point in LH1 that appears most easily breached. PufX appears to occupy a strategic position between the mobile alphabeta14 subunit and the Q(B) site, suggesting how the structure, possibly coupled with a flexible ring, plays a role in optimizing quinone exchange during photosynthesis.  相似文献   

17.
Previously, two binding sites for the secondary quinone Q(B) in the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) from Rhodopseudomonas viridis were identified by X-ray crystallography, a 'proximal' binding site close to the non-heme iron, and a 'distal' site, displaced by 4.2 A along the path of the isoprenoid tail [C.R.D. Lancaster and H. Michel, Structure 5 (1997) 1339-1359]. The quinone ring planes in the two sites differ by roughly a 180 degrees rotation around the isoprenoid tail. Here we present molecular dynamics simulations, which support the theory of a spontaneous transfer of Q(B) between the distal site and the proximal site. In contrast to earlier computational studies on RCs, the molecular dynamics simulations of Q(B) migration resulted in a proximal Q(B) binding pattern identical to that of the crystallographic findings. Also, we demonstrate that the preference towards the proximal Q(B) location is not necessarily attributed to reduction of Q(B) to the semiquinone, but already to the preceding reduction of the primary quinone Q(A) and resulting protonation changes in the protein. Energy mapping of the Q(B) binding pocket indicates that the quinone ring rotation required for completion of the transfer between the two sites is improbable at the distal or proximal binding sites due to high potential barriers, but may be possible at a newly identified position near the distal binding site.  相似文献   

18.
Sixteen years ago, we demonstrated, by immunological and biochemical approaches, that seven subunits of complex I are encoded in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and synthesized on mitochondrial ribosomes in mammalian cells. More recently, we carried out a biochemical, molecular, and cellular analysis of a mutation in the gene for one of these subunits, ND4, that causes Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON). We demonstrated that, in cells carrying this mutation, the mtDNA-encoded subunits of complex I are assembled into a complex, but the rate of complex I-dependent respiration is decreased. Subsequently, we isolated several mutants affected in one or another of the mtDNA-encoded subunits of complex I by exposing established cell lines to high concentrations of rotenone. Our analyses of these mtDNA mutations affecting subunits of complex I have shown that at least two of these subunits, ND4 and ND6, are essential for the assembly of the enzyme. ND5 appears to be located at the periphery of the enzyme and, while it is not essential for assembly of the other mtDNA-encoded subunits into a complex, it is essential for complex I activity. In fact, the synthesis of the ND5 polypeptide is rate limiting for the activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy reveals functional and structural similarities between the reaction centres of the chlorophyll d-binding photosystem I (PS I) and chlorophyll a-binding PS I. Continuous wave EPR spectrometry at 12K identifies iron-sulphur centres as terminal electron acceptors of chlorophyll d-binding PS I. A transient light-induced electron spin echo (ESE) signal indicates the presence of a quinone as the secondary electron acceptor (Q) between P(740)(+) and the iron-sulphur centres. The distance between P(740)(+) and Q(-) was estimated within point-dipole approximation as 25.23+/-0.05A, by the analysis of the electron spin echo envelope modulation.  相似文献   

20.
G Hofhaus  G Attardi 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(8):3043-3048
In most eukaryotic cells, the respiratory chain NADH dehydrogenase (Complex I) is a multimeric enzyme under dual (nuclear and mitochondrial) genetic control. Several genes encoding subunits of this enzyme have been identified in the mitochondrial genome from various organisms, but the functions of these subunits are in most part unknown. We describe here a human cell line in which the enzyme lacks the mtDNA-encoded subunit ND4 due to a frameshift mutation in the gene. In this cell line, the other mtDNA-encoded subunits fail to assemble, while at least some of the nuclear-encoded subunits involved in the redox reactions appear to be assembled normally. In fact, while there is a complete loss of NADH:Q1 oxidoreductase activity, the NADH:Fe(CN)6 oxidoreductase activity is normal. These observations provide the first clear evidence that the ND4 gene product is essential for Complex I activity and give some insights into the function and the structural relationship of this polypeptide to the rest of the enzyme. They are also significant for understanding the pathogenetic mechanism of the ND4 gene mutation associated with Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号